T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
3590.1 | Oh, no! | PROSE::GOGOLIN | | Fri May 11 1990 11:11 | 17 |
| Lisa,
What is Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy? Do you have any more
information on this disease? Such as:
what are the symptoms?
what effects does it have on an animal that contracts it?
is it fatal?
what animals can get it?
how do animals get it?
I've never heard of this disease -- is it possible that it only
exists in the UK?
Thanks,
Linda
|
3590.2 | WAG | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Fri May 11 1990 11:11 | 3 |
| Is it something that usually cattle get?
Deb
|
3590.3 | a.k.a Mad Cow Disease | UKCSSE::YOUNG | Geoff Young | Fri May 11 1990 11:25 | 22 |
|
BSE was originally identified in cows and sheep. It is known in the
British popular press as "Mad Cow Disease".
Symptoms are movement difficulties and nervousness.
It is, I believe, one of these diseases that is related to the food
chain of the animals it infects. Parts of dead cows being fed back to
other cows as meal etc. Perhaps someone else knows more here.
The British goverment has INSISTED for many months that it cannot
infect humans or other species. They say there is no way that
humans can get it from beef etc. However, British produced beef is
banned in certain EEC countries!
I bet HM Goverment Dept. of Agriculture will do its headless chicken
bit again, as it did with Salmonella in eggs.
We await the next development.
Geoff
|
3590.4 | More info ... | XNOGOV::LISA | | Fri May 11 1990 11:32 | 16 |
|
The first BSE type illness was detected in sheep and is called
scrapie. The illness then spread to cows and was named BSE.
Scientists/vets have been worried for some time that it could
hop to other species - including humans. The disease is transmitted
by feeding offal from infected animals to other animals. It can
take anything up to 5 years or more to show itself. The symptoms
are loss of co-ordination of the limbs, fits and other nervous
disorders. Who knows what gets put into cat food! It is a disease
of the nervous system. I don't know if its a problem in the USA
but it is here in europe. I really do hope that its just media
hype!
Lisa plus Pookie.
|
3590.5 | Not for the faint hearted. | HAMPS::PATTISON_M | _mm_/���\_mm_, wot, no pussies ? | Fri May 11 1990 11:42 | 54 |
| The disease:
BSE is confined to cattle (hence the Bovine bit), it is getting
a lot of news coverage over in the U.K. at the moment. It is
thought that this disease spread to cattle by feeding them minced
sheeps remains (Including central nervous tissues, e.g. brains &
spinal cord), there has been a similar disease in sheep for a couple
of hundred years, recently some experts have suggested that this
disease may be spread to humans as some low quality meat products,
e.g. sausages & hamburgers include miced nervous tissues, however
the government experts say this is not possible (BUT I heard
a government vet on the radio say this could not be spread to humans
in this way, but when pressed he admitted that his family had stopped
eating certain types of meat product since he started his
investigation!)
The symptoms :
The disease is commonly known as Mad Cow disease, and that seems
to be the main symptom, the brain goes 'soft' and the cow loses
coordination and staggers around like it is drunk, I suspect the
symptoms in other animals will be similar.
The Cat:
The cat which is referred to in .0 was put down and had an autopsy
performed after having the symptoms described above, the cause of
death was something similar to BSE. It is the first such case known in
a cat. The cat was fed on a seemingly good diet of tinned foot/dry
food/ and a bit of fresh food. At the moment no one knows how it
contracted the disease.
Prevention:
The media over here have been recommending only feeding pets on
'reputable' pet foods since this scare, but as the virus (I think
it's a virus anyway) which causes the disease is very hard to destroy,
and the temperatures used in normal food processing will not kill
it so it is difficult to see how this will make any difference.
However as the disease is only spread via Brains and the like, feeding
cats on rump steak and fresh salmon will definately keep them free
of BSE
The incubation period in cattle can be several years
so it is likely that we shall not know how wide spread this disease
has become for some time yet.
Disclaimer:
All my information has been gained from TV & radio, so please forgive
any omissions/inaccuracies.
|
3590.6 | | PROSE::GOGOLIN | | Fri May 11 1990 15:02 | 7 |
| Thanks to all for the information. Sounds pretty gruesome. I'll keep
my eyes peeled for any news here of BSE.
Well, got to go now and get some rump steak and fresh salmon so my
guys don't turn into mad cows! :-)
Linda
|
3590.7 | very interesting, wouldn't you say? | FORTSC::WILDE | Ask yourself..am I a happy cow? | Fri May 11 1990 18:19 | 17 |
| An interesting aside to this:
there is a disease common among "headhunter" tribes that participate in
ritual consumption of human brain tissue that brings on symptoms much like
these - in humans! of course, as there are very few headhunter cultures
left in the world, it isn't very common anymore. Under these circumstances,
I would be VERY cautious of any brain/nervous system tissue for myself
or my pets. If bovine, ovine, and human species have common symptomatic
afflication from the same type of source, then it isn't too far a leap
to assume the possibility that a common family of viruses are the source..
In America, we do not, as far as I know, feed chopped up animal tissue
back to our cattle and sheep - the fear of scrapie is widespread in the
southwestern US - sheep and cattle ranchers are extremely careful of
any possibility of infection.....of course, I'm not a rancher, so I
am offering hear-say on the cattlefeed issue......[insert general
disclaimer, etc.]
|
3590.8 | Mad Cow Symptoms | JOCKEY::GLEDHILLS | No Brakes, No Steering | Mon May 14 1990 08:53 | 79 |
| The following is reprinted (without permission) from The Times,
11/5/90:
'Mad Cow' Symptons found in pet cat.
A condition closely resembling 'mad cow' disease, the brain disorder
that has killed more than 13,000 British cattle, has been diagnosed
for the first time in a domestic cat.
It is not yet known how the cat, a five-year-old neutered male Siamese,
became infected, or whether this feline form of the disease, known
as Spongiform Encephalopathy (SE), can be transmitted between species.
Scientists are investigating whether it can be passed to laboratory
mice.
Mr Keith Meldrum, the Government's chief veterinary officer, said
"There is no need for pet owners to change their pet food or to
consider putting their cats down. The risk to man is no greater
than it was before the diagnosis."
A human form of the condition, Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease (CJD),
kills about 30 people a year in England; there is however no evidence
that the incidence of CJD, which occurs in about one in every two
million people, is in any way related to the presence of SE in other
animals.
Mr Meldrum said the cat had been referred to Bristol University
by a local vet after it showed nervous symptoms and unsteadiness
on its feet and failed to respond to treatment. It was destroyed
on April 6th and a post-mortem examination showed "typical lesions
of SE", Mr Meldrum said. "Such findings have not been reported
previously in domestic cats at this stage".
The cat was apparently fed a wide range of pet food. There are
four other cats and four dogs in the same household. All are said
to be healthy.
Mr John Bower, the president of the British Veterinary Association,
said it was possible that cases of SE had occurred sporadically
in cats before but had not been diagnosed. "From time to time vets
are presented with cats with nervous symptoms, but in the vast majority
of fatal cases no post-mortem examination of the brain is carried
out".
"It is possible the cat developed the disease spontaneously, as
in the cas of cat AIDS. It is tempting but purely speculative to
link this with BSE, the disease in cattle. The lesions are similar
but there is no evidence yet of any connection between the two.
A thorough investigation was required into the feeding habits of
the cat that died".
Cattle are believed to have contracted the disease by eating feed
containing protein from sheep infected with scrapie, the ovine form
of the ailment. One hypothesis is that pet food containing similar
material could have been the transmission route to cats.
Sheep protein is now banned in cattle feed but not in pet food.
Cattle showing symptoms of the disease have to be destroyed and
cattle brain and other offals, which are thought to harbour the
organism, are also banned from human consumption.
Last summer, the Pet Food Manufacturers Association, advised its
memebers to stop using banned offals. The association said last
night it was "absolutely confident" that its members were abiding
by the recommendation. Mr Michael Jenkins, of Pedigree Pet Foods,
said: "All our materials come from healthy animals fit for human
consumption. We do not use any condemned offals."
As SE can be incubated for up to eight years without any symptoms
showing, it is possible that the cat could have been infected by
feed consumed before the association made its recommendation.
....
There are an estimated 7 million dogs and 7 million cats in Britain
which consume some 1.15 million tonnes of prepared food worth #825
million a year.
|
3590.9 | | BEDAZL::ZICKEFOOSE | LENNICE | Mon May 14 1990 14:17 | 2 |
| If the sheep version is "scrapie", then I assume the cow version,
BSE, is pronounced "bessie"? :)
|